© 2018, The Author(s). In humans, attentional biases have been shown to negative (dangerous animals, physical threat) and positive (high caloric food, alcohol) stimuli. However, it is not clear whether these attentional biases reflect on stimulus driven, bottom up, or goal driven, top down, attentional processes. Here we show that, like humans, Japanese macaques show an attentional bias to snakes in a dot probe task (Experiment 1). Moreover, this attentional bias reflects on bottom up driven, preferential engagement of attention by snake images (Experiment 2a), a finding that was replicated in a study that used the same methodology in humans (Experiment 2b). These results are consistent with the notion that attentional bias to snakes reflec...
Predation is a major source of natural selection on primates and may have shaped attentional process...
According to the snake detection hypothesis (Isbell, 2006), fear specifically of snakes may have pus...
According to the snake detection hypothesis (Isbell, 2006), fear specifically of snakes may have pus...
In humans, attentional biases have been shown to negative (dangerous animals, physical threat) and p...
International audienceDetecting and identifying predators quickly is key to survival. According to t...
Studies of event-related potentials in humans have established larger early posterior negativity (EP...
There is growing evidence from both behavioral and neurophysiological approaches that primates are a...
The present study investigated whether the perception of evolutionarily threatening animals is prior...
According to the snake detection hypothesis (Isbell, 2006), fear specifically of snakes may have pu...
Predation is a major source of natural selection on primates and may have shaped attentional process...
For group-living species like humans and nonhuman primates, the ability to navigate social encounter...
Research has consistently shown that threat stimuli automatically attract attention in order to acti...
Gamma oscillations (30–80 Hz) have been suggested to be involved in feedforward visual information p...
Information regarding successful solutions to environmental hazards has accumulated in the gene poo...
Recent evidence for an evolved fear module in the brain comes from studies showing that adults, chil...
Predation is a major source of natural selection on primates and may have shaped attentional process...
According to the snake detection hypothesis (Isbell, 2006), fear specifically of snakes may have pus...
According to the snake detection hypothesis (Isbell, 2006), fear specifically of snakes may have pus...
In humans, attentional biases have been shown to negative (dangerous animals, physical threat) and p...
International audienceDetecting and identifying predators quickly is key to survival. According to t...
Studies of event-related potentials in humans have established larger early posterior negativity (EP...
There is growing evidence from both behavioral and neurophysiological approaches that primates are a...
The present study investigated whether the perception of evolutionarily threatening animals is prior...
According to the snake detection hypothesis (Isbell, 2006), fear specifically of snakes may have pu...
Predation is a major source of natural selection on primates and may have shaped attentional process...
For group-living species like humans and nonhuman primates, the ability to navigate social encounter...
Research has consistently shown that threat stimuli automatically attract attention in order to acti...
Gamma oscillations (30–80 Hz) have been suggested to be involved in feedforward visual information p...
Information regarding successful solutions to environmental hazards has accumulated in the gene poo...
Recent evidence for an evolved fear module in the brain comes from studies showing that adults, chil...
Predation is a major source of natural selection on primates and may have shaped attentional process...
According to the snake detection hypothesis (Isbell, 2006), fear specifically of snakes may have pus...
According to the snake detection hypothesis (Isbell, 2006), fear specifically of snakes may have pus...